NEW DELHI: Apart from ensuring that the polling in Maharashtra and Jharkhand was scheduled mid-week on Wednesday to prevent voters from clubbing it with the weekend for a vacation, the Election Commission will call a meeting of municipal commissioners and district election officers of constituencies with a history of low turnouts, to discuss ways to tackle urban voter apathy .
EC shared that 62 of the 64 urban assembly constituencies in 2019 assembly polls in Maharashtra had recorded voting below the state’s 60.6% average, with the urban Colaba recording the lowest voting at 40.1% and the rural Jalgaon and Bhusawal clocking 45.4% and 48.9% turnouts respectively. In the 2024 Lok Sabha polls too, six parliamentary constituencies in Maharashtra — Kalyan, Pune, Thane, Mumbai-North Central, Mumbai South and Mumbai South Central — were among the 10 urban PCs with the lowest voting.
During the last assembly elections in states like Haryana, Karnataka and Gujarat, a notable difference was seen between turnouts in certain urban constituencies and the state’s average. For instance, Gurugram and Faridabad recorded 51.8% and 53.7% polling against Haryana’s 67.9% average in recent assembly polls. Also Bomanhalli AC in Bengaluru South recorded 47.5% polling as against the state’s 73.8% average. Gandhidham in Gujarat polls clocked 48.1% turnout, way lower than the state’s 64.8% average.
Kumar appealed to voters in urban areas, particularly of Maharashtra, to participate in elections and buck the urban voter apathy trend.
“We are really concerned about urban apathy. We want to appeal to all voters in urban areas to come and vote. It is not a healthy trend which is reflected,” he said.
The CEC shared that the EC would call a meeting soon with the municipal commissioners and district election officers from the urban ACs of concern and encourage them to take special initiatives and launch drives to motivate the reluctant urban voter to participate in the upcoming polls.
“We will do a lot of work on this,” he assured.
EC shared that 62 of the 64 urban assembly constituencies in 2019 assembly polls in Maharashtra had recorded voting below the state’s 60.6% average, with the urban Colaba recording the lowest voting at 40.1% and the rural Jalgaon and Bhusawal clocking 45.4% and 48.9% turnouts respectively. In the 2024 Lok Sabha polls too, six parliamentary constituencies in Maharashtra — Kalyan, Pune, Thane, Mumbai-North Central, Mumbai South and Mumbai South Central — were among the 10 urban PCs with the lowest voting.
During the last assembly elections in states like Haryana, Karnataka and Gujarat, a notable difference was seen between turnouts in certain urban constituencies and the state’s average. For instance, Gurugram and Faridabad recorded 51.8% and 53.7% polling against Haryana’s 67.9% average in recent assembly polls. Also Bomanhalli AC in Bengaluru South recorded 47.5% polling as against the state’s 73.8% average. Gandhidham in Gujarat polls clocked 48.1% turnout, way lower than the state’s 64.8% average.
Kumar appealed to voters in urban areas, particularly of Maharashtra, to participate in elections and buck the urban voter apathy trend.
“We are really concerned about urban apathy. We want to appeal to all voters in urban areas to come and vote. It is not a healthy trend which is reflected,” he said.
The CEC shared that the EC would call a meeting soon with the municipal commissioners and district election officers from the urban ACs of concern and encourage them to take special initiatives and launch drives to motivate the reluctant urban voter to participate in the upcoming polls.
“We will do a lot of work on this,” he assured.
You may also like
'She's not as strong as me': What Biden and Obama talked about Kamala Harris in an off-mic conversation
Heavy rains predicted in six TN districts Friday, Chennai may get respite
No response from Union Agriculture Minister Chouhan to meeting request: MP Cong chief
'Raju James Bond' Promises 40 Minutes Of Laughter In Its 136-Minute Runtime, Says Director Deepak Madhuvanahalli
Liam Payne's X Factor co-star who he called 'mammy' pays tear-jerking tribute to singer